Kelly opens Irish career with victory


Associated Press

SOUTH BEND, Ind.

Brian Kelly looked around at a packed stadium and saw — fittingly enough — a sea of kelly green shirts.

On a day of firsts for Notre Dame’s new head coach, highlighted by a 23-12 win over Purdue, the colorful and enthusiastic crowd stood out. They were actually rooting for his team.

SDLqMaybe this is just my background, but anytime I’ve gone into a stadium with 81,000, I’ve always played up to that opponent. Now, it was 81,000, and it was our people,” Kelly said. “The crowd was into it and it was a great advantage.”

If the atmosphere was neat and the victory satisfying, the momento Kelly got after the game from athletic director Jack Swarbrick — the man who picked him for the job — was one for the trophy case.

Kelly got the game ball.

“That will be something that is very memorable,” said Kelly, who transformed programs at Grand Valley State, Central Michigan and Cincinnati into steady winners and now has his dream job. “Hopefully there are many more of those to come.”

Kelly has been heralded as a savior for a proud program that went 16-21 over the previous three years, and the team he took over last December showed promise in running his spread offense Saturday.

The Irish also played solid defense that was lacking last season. They had four sacks and two interceptions against Purdue’s Robert Marvel.

“I took on the challenge at Noter Dame because I want to see this program back to where I believe it should be, and that’s amongst the elite in college football,” Kelly said.

“We’ve got some work to do. We are not there yet, believe me. Trust me. But we took a step today and we’re going to keep pounding at it and working at it.”

Quarterback Dayne Crist passed for 205 yards and a touchdown in first start, while running back Armando Allen had a 22-yard TD run in the first quarter and set up another with a punt return.